State ex rel. Walsh v. Dailey

7 Mo. App. 548, 1879 Mo. App. LEXIS 139
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 4, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 Mo. App. 548 (State ex rel. Walsh v. Dailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Walsh v. Dailey, 7 Mo. App. 548, 1879 Mo. App. LEXIS 139 (Mo. Ct. App. 1879).

Opinions

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant Dailey, as administrator of Roddy, commenced an action under the statute for the possession of specific personal property which he claimed as belonging to the estate of his intestate. Plaintiff’s relator was one of the sureties in the bond given by the administrator on instituting this action. The personal property claimed was delivered by the sheriff to Dailey, who received the same as administrator. Judgment was for defendant and against the sureties, in that action, for the value of the property and costs. The principal and co-surety of Walsh, the relator of plaintiff in the present action, being insolvent, Walsh, the relator of plaintiff, was compelled to satisfy the judgment. Under the statute (Wag. Stats. 1304, sect. 9), which provides that where judgment is given on any bond for the delivery of property, against, the principal debtor and surety, if such surety shall pay the judgment he shall have judgment, on motion in the same court, against the principal debtor for the amount paid and ten per cent interest, Walsh obtained judgment in the Circuit Court against Dailey as administrator of Roddy, for the amount paid by him, as aforesaid, and interest; the Circuit Court at the same time ordering Dailey, as administrator, to. pay the sum to Walsh, plaintiff’s relator. This action is upon the bond of Dailey as administrator, against him and his sureties, and alleges these facts, and that the relator of plaintiff has made demand of Dailey, which has been refused. The petition alleges, as breaches of the administrator’s bond, that Dailey did not pay the value of the property to the defendant in the action for the personalty, in consequence of which default plaintiff’s relator was compelled to pay the same ; and that Dailey did not pay to plaintiff’s relator the judgment obtained against him by the relator in the Circuit Court, though ordered to do so, and though demand was duly made.

A demurrer to this petition was interposed by one of the [551]*551defendant’s sureties on the administrator’s bond, on the ground that the petition shows no cause of action against the sureties on the administrator’s bond. The demurrer was overruled, and there was final judgment for plaintiff.

An administrator may bring an action for the possession of goods claimed by him as belonging to the estate of his intestate, and if judgment goes against him in the action, it goes against him as administrator only, and is not de bonis propriis. Ranney v. Thomas, 45 Mo. 112. This judgment, if he had done his duty, the administrator must have the means of satisfying out of the assets of the estate, because it is a judgment that he return property, or its value, which he has actually received as administrator, under a mistaken claim. The sureties on the bond of the administrator are responsible for all moneys and property that come into the hands of the administrator as such in virtue of his office. Thus, the sureties are liable for rents collected by an administrator, though as administrator he was not to collect rents, and for the proceeds of real estate sold by the executor under a power given in the will, though that power was unduly exercised. Gamble v. Gibson, 59 Mo. 585; Dix v. Morris, 66 Mo. 514. When judgment in the claim and delivery suit was given against the administrator, the defendant in that action might, if he had so chosen, have proceeded against the administrator and the sureties on his official bond. From the moment that the administrator received the personalty claimed by him in the statutory action, that personalty became the property of the estate. It was certainly not the property of the administrator ; and the defendant in the claim and delivery suit, by refusing to take it back, abandoned all claim to the specific personalty. All money or other goods which the administrator receives as administrator are the property of the estate, within the meaning of that language in the bond, irrespective of any question which may arise as to the manner in which they were acquired. The bond of the [552]*552administrator is that he “ will faithfully administer the estate, account for, pay, and deliver all money and property of said estate, and perform all other things touching said administration required by law or the order or decree of any court having jurisdiction.” Wag. Stats. 73, sect. 18. It is said that the judgment in the action claiming the property was a judicial determination that the goods delivered to the administrator by the sheriff were not the property of the estate. It settled that the administrator had no right to the possession of them at the time the claim was made; but whether the deceased owned them or not, or whether they properly came into the possession of the administrator as having belonged to the deceased or not, they were “ property of the estate” after they came into the charge of the administrator. Au intestate may die in possession of goods unlawfully acquired, and therefore not his property ; but if such goods came into the hands of his administrator as such, they are nevertheless property of the estate, for the due administration of which the administrator is liable, as also are the sureties on his bond. Whatever property the administrator gets possession of by virtue of his office, though it comes to him through a mistake of law or fact and may not have belonged to the deceased, and though it does not properly belong to the estate, is nevertheless the property of the estate whilst in the administrator’s hands, at least in such a sense that he is liable for any waste. If the administrator claims the property and gets it into his possession, neither he nor his sureties, when called to account by the real owner, can defend on the ground that the property which the administrator has treated as property of the estate did not- legally belong to it and was not therefore the proper subject of administration. If the deceased has during life converted to his own use specific goods belonging to another, of which the administrator takes charge as tile goods of the deceased, the administrator surely commits a breach of his bond if he [553]*553destroys or culpably loses such goods; and it would be no answer, when sued upon his bond by the real owner of the goods, to say that, not being property of the estate, these goods are not named in the administrator’s bond, and he is not officially liable for the disposition he may have made of them.

But if, as we have no doubt, the defendant in the claim and delivery action might have proceeded against the sureties of the administrator, on his refusal to pay the judgment against him as administrator, for the value of the property taken, the surety on the bond in the suit, who has paid the judgment, being subrogated to the rights of the defendant, is in no worse position. The Circuit Court had undoubted jurisdiction to give judgment in favor of Walsh against Dailey as administrator, and to order its payment out of the goods of the deceased ; and the neglect to perform and obey the order and decree of the Circuit Court was a breach of the administrator’s bond, according to its plain terms, for which the sureties are liable.

The position of counsel for appellants, that the surety of an administrator will be liable only, for such assets as he had a right to receive and was therefore bound to administer, is quite untenable, in view of the adjudicated cases in Missouri.

The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.

All the judges concur.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Mo. App. 548, 1879 Mo. App. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-walsh-v-dailey-moctapp-1879.